Click here to receive your FREE subscription to Campus Technology
5/7/2008
Rock legend Neil Young joined Sun Microsystems' Executive Vice President of Software Rich Green on stage during the opening keynote of the 13th annual JavaOne conference, underway this week in San Francisco.
Dressed in jeans, a baseball cap, and huge, wrap-around sunglasses, Young unveiled a new, interactive, multi-media-enhanced archive of his music recorded between 1963 and 1972, which will be available on Blu-ray discs.
Joking with the crowd, which had to sit through several blessedly brief live demo crashes, Young said about his own presentation, "This is all fake, so we know it'll work."
What does Neil Young have to do with Java (which the Canadian singer-songwriter pronounced with a short A, like "Javelin")? Java is the underlying platform for the new BD-Live capabilities of the Blu-ray format, which provided the user interactivity features on his Blu-ray music archives. BD-Live allows updates of all aspects of a Blu-ray Disc via the Internet. Young said he plans to release his entire music archive on Blu-ray discs.
Young's appearance underscored this year's conference theme, "Java + You," and the growing importance Sun is placing on technologies for delivering rich Internet applications (RIAs) across all computing devices. Green talked about Java's role in supporting improved user experiences that merge information from different services across "all the screens of your life."
Green told attendees that a developer preview version of Sun's JavaFX will be available in July. JavaFX is a collection of tools that includes a runtime, scripting language, and media-coded framework for building RIAs. Sun first announced JavaFX at last year's JavaOne show in May. The technology competes with rival tools from Microsoft (Silverlight) and Adobe (AIR). Sun CEO Jonathan Schwartz, who joined Green onstage, acknowledged this competition. "We're taking on the marketplace," he said.
"This is really an RIA revolution," Green added.
The JavaFX Desktop SDK Early Access Program is set for July; the company plans to ship JavaFX Desktop 1 in the fall; and the company plans to ship JavaFX Mobile and TV 1.0 in the spring of 2009, Green said.
Green demoed three JavaFX applications during his presentation. Photo Flockr is an application that allows users to search for tagged photos online and view them in a graphical swarm, sort of like a flock of birds. Movie Cloud is a 3D sphere interface that can present graphical links to dozens of high definition videos swirling within it. He used the Connected Life demo to show how to create RIAs that span multiple "screens," across a Web browser, social network, desktop OS, and mobile device.
He touched on two other projects currently in the works: Project Hydrazine is a service designed to allow developers to bring new services together and provide them in a running cloud environment. It's due after the release of JavaFX. Project Insight is designed to allow JavaFX developers to communicate with their audiences via "instrumented user action data"-essentially, to track how their applications are being used. Sun emphasizes that the application will not collect personally identifiable information about end users.
In May in San Francisco, experts from leading universities, libraries, and research institutions around the world met as part of an ongoing effort to address a pressing issue: archiving the world's history, right up to today.
The Quilt, a coalition of 28 regional network organizations, has added XO Communications Services to its authorized vendor list. The Quilt represents 200 universities and thousands of other educational institutions across the United States. With this new relationship, Quilt members can purchase XO's high-speed IP transit and network transport services at competitive rates.
At the NECC 2008 conference in Texas this week, Wimba launched a new version of Wimba Classroom, the virtual classroom component of the company's Collaboration Suite. The new 5.2 release expands options for classroom capture and adds a variety of other functional and ease of use features.
The lure of automating workflow online so human intervention is minimized is continually reinforced in the minds of higher education administrators by examples of automated campus systems such as financials, student information systems, and other enterprise systems. But what's good for management is not always good for learning.
Cognos, which IBM acquired in January, has released an update to its business intelligence software that will run on the Linux operating system on IBM System z mainframes. IBM Cognos 8 BI was being developed by the two companies prior to the acquisition, but assimilation of Cognos into IBM accelerated development.
Facebook is a way to greet a colleague as if she or he is on your own campus: a wave at a distance, a hello at the corner burrito place, a honk as you both leave the campus parking lot. Informal collegiality has been extended over the miles.